Since I have never been in the military or deployed oversees I had a question about what was brought with you. Anytime I watch History or Discovery and they are showing some shootout between some small group of marines or something being ambushed by BG's they say how the battle lasted for hours with out any support. Now, when I go to the range, I can shoot through hundreds of rounds in not a lot of time at all. How much ammo does the average soldier carry on a patrol or something like that? When you are out numbered 4 or 5 to one it seems like you could shoot through quite a few magazines and I imagine that you can only carry so much. Even at 6 rounds a minute thats 720 rounds in two hours. How do eleven or twelve men defend a position for hours upon hours with only what they carry against 50 or more assailants?

You're making my head hurt now forcing me to think back. Best that I can recall the regs called a combat load as 240 rds for the M-16. Realistically tho, you carried as much water and ammo as you could carry. Can't have too much of either.
Not everyone will be firing 6 rds a minute for X hours on end.

ISP is more or less right. Let's say 10 mags for the M-16 and (if assigned) 4 mags for the sidearm. That is 300 .223 and 60 9mm. You can do a lot of damage with that much ammo. A WWII M1 ammo belt carried only 80 rounds.It not like you will be fight alone, you will have multiple soldiers, planes, vehicles, hunting and killing the enemy. It isn't always a constant firefight, there is manuveuring, recon, communicating and other stuff involved. Unless it is a full blown assault, I think you would run out of targets before you run out of ammo.

That the average grunt can carry at most 500 rounds of 223 ammo. When you see a firefight in most cases it is a bunch of guys shooting at each other not just the one, doubt that they would shoot at each other stratght for hours, more like whenever the opposrtunity presented. I guess it can be a waiting game big time.

The average non-infantry trooper using the old LBE used to carry 210 rounds in 7 mags...six in the belt pouches, one in the rifle...But now, with LBV's and MOLLE etc, many more rounds can be carried, but other issues may be at work:

Examples:

Many who ride mainly in a vehicle may have a butt-load of rounds carried high on their chest to where they can get at it...But if they have to get prone when their ride gets smoked, it can be a bummer...

Many who are dismounts have different configurations...

If you have to be very "mobile" on your feet, different configurations...

The list goes on...Not too cut-and-dry a subject...Many different units use many different loadouts...I know this subject well

The basic load for us was 210 rounds.. 6 30 rounders in the 4 slanted pockets on the LBE and one for the magazine is what we carried on trips to Afghanistan with the regulation LBE. However the Special Forces guys had some LBE that could carry a bunch.

When I was in Iraq it was a rare soldier that didn't have a mag on the butt of his gun for extra ammo. Most of the fighting on convoy was heavy weapons from the vehicles and the guys dressed pretty light so they could move in a hurry if their ride got shot up.

Overloaded with gear meant you may miss the the last truck and the BGs kill you. Plus it is hot as hell or cold as hell depending on job and time of day. Gunners on the night run in the rain get froze good as fast as the convoys go. In the day time the rigs have airconditioning (most but not all) but in august the temp is 137 degrees (felt temp) and the dust is unbelievable. There is a reason they call em "Ragheads"

Everyone dresses for the mission they are on. Threat level is always high and I always thought that the most important thing we all had going for us was the body armour, saves lots of good men.

Since I have never been in the military or deployed oversees I had a question about what was brought with you. Anytime I watch History or Discovery and they are showing some shootout between some small group of marines or something being ambushed by BG's they say how the battle lasted for hours with out any support. Now, when I go to the range, I can shoot through hundreds of rounds in not a lot of time at all. How much ammo does the average soldier carry on a patrol or something like that? When you are out numbered 4 or 5 to one it seems like you could shoot through quite a few magazines and I imagine that you can only carry so much. Even at 6 rounds a minute thats 720 rounds in two hours. How do eleven or twelve men defend a position for hours upon hours with only what they carry against 50 or more assailants?

Explosives my friend explosives. And the fact that while an assault may last for hours the time the enemy is exposed to an individual infantryman's bullets can be measured in seconds. There are exceptions to that rule such as the allied human wave attacks we call D-Day.

Honestly most ammunition expenditure in modern militaries appears to be shooting into random nothingness where they hope an enemy might be. Consider that it takes our military 250,000 rounds on average to kill a single enemy. Realistically without counting machineguns and vehicular weapons its probably more like 5-20,000, still an immense amount.

In Vietnam you had jungle to shoot into, in Iraq you have long abandoned buildings and rubble.

Standard loadout in my unit is 210 for M-16/M-4: One mag in weapon and 3 in each ammo pouch. Someone asked about the SAW as well. Not sure if it's standard, but here I carry 800 rounds. One drum in weapon, one on hip, and two in alice pack.

__________________
"The very atmosphere of firearms anywhere and everywhere restrains evil interference - they deserve a place of honor with all that's good"

In Iraq I carried anywhere between 250-300 rounds (10 thirty-round mags) in a non-regulation rig. Depending on the mission, I either carried another bandolier of 5.56 or had it close by. I carried a pop-up flare, two frags, a smoke, and some non-lethal grenades for the rock-throwing kiddies.

My SAW Gunners carried either 2-3 200 rd. drums on them and there were 5-6 extra drums floating around the squad.

..my guess is that soldiers, despite being caught up in the seriouness of a battle still have to consciously pace themselves with their spending up their ammo supply..in WW2 I read of many fighter pilots who would switch off 2 guns to keep some ammo in reserve in case of a prolonged fight....if there isn't an immeadiate supply available then ground troops don't just spray shots continously..then they would run dry in a lengthened fight...

Interesting how war is, the standard load of ammo is 180 rnds and if everyone hit one man with each round the war would be over quickly. Nice to see they put good optics on the guns now as the hit potential went way up. Now if they could figure out how to get you to not crap your pants when the shooting starts

When I was with the Big Red One in VietNam we carried 20 magazines (20 rounds) 100 rounds for the M-60, 2 hand frags, smoke grenades, a claymore, plus all the food and water to last for 3 days. We usualy stayed out in the bush for 10 to12 days and were resupplied every third day with food and water and ammo.

Standard operating Procedure calls for a soldier to carry 210 basic load of 5.56 M16A2 amunition. 1 30 round magazine locked in the magazine well of the weapon and 6 30 round magazines carried in two pouches. Typically a soldier will carry more if the mission dictates. You are also loaded down with kevlar helmet, body armor at least 2 quarts of water, gas mask plus anything else your commander deems necessary to load you with. Not Fun,Not Fun.

__________________
1. Treat every firearm as if it were loaded.
2. Never point a firearm at anything you do not intend to shoot.
3. Keep the finger off the trigger and firearm on safe until ready to shoot.
4. Know the target and what's beyond it.

This is a great question and took quite a bit of thought. As I try to remember back 40 years ago and from what I can recall DBski is correct. That early in the war though I carried an M-14 and all the usual compliments.

BTW, I have a video of the new M-60E4 that is capable of firing 15,000 rds before requiring a barrel change. During testing they clipped together eight and one half belts of ammo, that's 850 rds and fired them all non-stop with one pull of the trigger, that took 1:45 seconds! Very impressive. Talk about fire power.

Also, is it true that todays M-16's have a selector switch for burst instead of full auto because so much ammo was wasted in Vietnam?

Another little known fact that I posted in another thread. Did you know that Lady Bird Johnson, our First Lady during part of the war, owned a munitions factory and received one half penny for every bullet fired in Vietnam?

Quote:

CobrayCommando sez:
How much did that load weigh?

As much as 90# or more and you should try jumping out of a airplane with that!

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